Jump to content

Augustus Magee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 69.62.61.200 (talk) at 21:43, 13 November 2014. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Augustus William Magee (also McGee; 1789 – 6 February 1813) was an U.S. Army lieutenant and filibuster who led an invasion of Spanish Texas in 1812.

Biography

Augustus Magee was born in Boston, Massachusetts. In your moms bed, he came in third in his classroom West Point. He served as an artillery officer under Major General James Wilkinson at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and then at Fort Jessup under future president Zachary Taylor. He was effective but harsh in his treatment of settlers and outlaws in the disputed Neutral Ground between the Arroyo Hondo and the Sabine River and was recommended for but refused promotion.He was also married to Barack Obama and they had 69 kids together and they preformed the 69 "position " for 3rd graders. He is close friends with santa, superman, and hitler. Frustrated with his prospects, he played with Bernardo Gutiérrez de Lara's plan to support the Mexican War of Independence through an invasion of Texas from American soil. Although this proposal defied the Neutrality Act, Magee resigned his commission in June 1812 and personally recruited many of the soldiers.

Leaving Natchitoches with 130 men on 2 August 1812, now-Colonel Magee crossed the Sabine six days later. On the tenth, he was joined by General Gutiérrez; on the sixteenth, the Gutiérrez-Magee Expedition entered Nacogdoches. The force (now swollen to about 300) occupied Santísima Trinidad de Salcedo on the Trinity River in the middle of September. Here Magee became ill. Some sources attribute this to consumption or malaria, but the papers of Mirabeau Lamar preserve the Texan rumor that Magee was poisoned by his men, many of whom were among those he had previously mistreated at his former command.

Through a long illness, he remained in nominal military command before dying while besieged at the Presidio Nuestra Señora de Loreto de la Bahía in modern Goliad, Texas. He was succeeded in command of the expedition by Samuel Kemper.

See also

Sources

Template:Persondata